Failure to Follow Mobility Orders and Emergency Procedures During Supervised Smoking
Summary
The deficiency involves the facility’s failure to ensure adequate supervision and appropriate use of assistive devices to prevent accidents during a supervised smoking activity. The resident involved had multiple diagnoses, including COPD, myoclonus, seizures, bradycardia, macular degeneration, weakness, and a cognitive communication deficit. A physician’s order directed assist of one for all transfers with a rollator and specified that the resident was to ambulate with therapy only. The admission MDS documented that the resident required substantial assistance for transfers, did not ambulate, used a wheelchair, and was dependent on staff for mobility. The resident’s care plan identified the resident as a current smoker with ADL self-care, mobility, and performance deficits due to failure to initiate, weakness, and impaired vision, and required supervision for smoking at all times, assist of two for transfers, wheelchair use for locomotion, and monitoring for altered respiratory status. On the day of the incident, a nurse’s note documented that the resident went to the smoking activity using a rolling walker with staff assist because the resident wanted to walk rather than use the wheelchair. NA #6 reported that she had initially assisted the resident into a wheelchair for the smoking activity, but when the resident requested to walk with a rolling walker, she did not reference the resident care card and instead asked RN #4 if the resident could walk. RN #4 told her it was fine and that the resident could use the exercise, without checking physician’s orders or the care plan. NA #6 then walked alongside the resident, without a wheelchair following, as the resident used the rolling walker down the hallway to the dining room, where the resident was seated to wait for the outside smoking activity. NA #6 then left the resident and returned to the unit. During the supervised smoking activity, NA #1 and NA #2 were responsible for supervising approximately twelve residents, including the resident involved. NA #1 stated that the resident walked outside independently with a rolling walker and sat on a bench. About fifteen minutes into the activity, NA #1 observed the resident slumped forward and to the right, appearing faint and unresponsive to verbal cues. NA #1 reported that she panicked and ran inside to locate RN #3, leaving NA #2 alone with the resident and the other residents, despite knowing that two staff were required to remain outside during the smoking activity. The facility’s smoking policy required that walkie-talkies or electronic devices be brought out with the smoking cart and used to contact the supervisor in case of emergency, but NA #1 reported that walkie-talkies were not utilized and she did not think to call the facility main line. RN #3 documented that she was notified in person by NA #1 that the resident might not be breathing, and upon going outside, she observed the resident hunched over on a bench, breathing but nonverbal, not communicating, and with pale/abnormal skin color. RN #4 documented that when informed by the nursing supervisor that the resident was slumped over in the smoking area, she went to check and found the resident unresponsive with abnormal skin color and initiated a sternal rub. She then went back into the building to obtain oxygen, and when she returned, the resident was responsive and in a wheelchair being brought toward the room by another nurse. Oxygen was applied in the hallway, and the resident had one episode of vomiting as EMS arrived to transport the resident. Interviews with the Director of Rehab and the DON confirmed that the resident was unsafe to ambulate with nursing staff, required a wheelchair within reach at all times due to unpredictable weakness and balance, and that NA #6 and RN #4 failed to verify and follow the resident’s ambulation and transfer orders. The DON also stated that staff supervising smoking were responsible for having a cell phone to contact the nursing supervisor and that NA #1 should not have left the smoking area with only one staff member present. The facility’s accident and incidents policy required the provision of appropriate assistive devices and supervision to prevent avoidable accidents, but staff did not follow these requirements, and a facility policy for following physician’s orders was not provided when requested.
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